Tag Archives: House

I’ve been seeing great acceptance on the concept of ops Ready State. Technologists from both ops and dev immediately understand the need to “draw a line in the sand” between system prep and installation. We also admit that getting physical infrastructure to Ready State is largely taken for granted; however, it often takes multiple attempts to get it right and even small application changes can require a full system rebuild.

Since even small changes can redefine the ready state requirements, changing Ready State can feel like being told to tear down your house so you remodel the kitchen.

A friend asked me to explain “Ready State” in non-technical terms. So far, the best analogy that I’ve found is when a house is “Roughed In.” It’s helpful if you’ve ever been part of house construction but may not be universally accessible so I’ll explain.

Getting to Rough In means that all of the basic infrastructure of the house is in place but nothing is finished. The foundation is poured, the plumbing lines are placed, the electrical mains are ready, the roof on and the walls are up. The house is being built according to architectural plans and major decisions like how many rooms there are and the function of the rooms (bathroom, kitchen, great room, etc). For Ready State, that’s like having the servers racked and setup with Disk, BIOS, and network configured.

While we’ve built a lot, rough in is a relatively early milestone in construction. Even major items like type of roof, siding and windows can still be changed. Speaking of windows, this is like installing an operating system in Ready State. We want to consider this as a distinct milestone because there’s still room to make changes. Once the roof and exteriors are added, it becomes much more disruptive and expensive to make.

Once the house is roughed in, the finishing work begins. Almost nothing from roughed in will be visible to the people living in the house. Like a Ready State setup, the users interact with what gets laid on top of the infrastructure. For homes it’s the walls, counters, fixtures and following. For operators, its applications like Hadoop, OpenStack or CloudFoundry.

Taking this analogy back to where we started, what if we could make rebuilding an entire house take just a day?! In construction, that’s simply not practical; however, we’re getting to a place in Ops where automation makes it possible to reconstruct the infrastructure configuration much faster.

While we can’t re-pour the foundation (aka swap out physical gear) instantly, we should be able to build up from there to ready state in a much more repeatable way.